The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, August 19, 1897, Image 7
lr~
"
"Not Worth a Rush."
When calling anything "not worth a
traw," one means to Imply that it is ,
worthless. The older saying was, "not J
worth a rush," and this brings out the
origin of the phrase. In the days before
carpets it was the custom to strew .
the floor with rushes. When guests of i
rrank were entertained fresh rushes i
were spread for them; but folk of lower |
degree had to be content with rushes
that had already been used, while still j
humbler persons had none, as not even
being "worth a rush."
RAM'S HORN BLASTS.
Warning Notes Calling the Wicked te
Repentance.
HRIST did not
'T.L'ff ( .come Into the i
fi ^ world to reform
It? ^ut t0 ^ve il
V bis own life.
J p The Christian
j A fb^/kPS should keep out
I of the path in
\V/s&v\ Yttatttl which he cannot
yv^3 y find the footprints
4r God never made
a ecw that gave
* ' ? milk punch.
Every drunkard's wife knows that
there is a devil.
Before we can live right, we must
first love right,
s The best preaching is not always
fe; done in the pulpit.
jL Perfect peace is always the result of
perfect trust in God.
Whoever sows good seed has God's
word for a good crop.
Sheep are sometimes taken over a
bad road to a good pasture.
When we grumble much, it is a 6ure
sign that we pray too little.
Many a man wants better preaching,
who has no wish for better living.
I The saloon will go In a hurry, when
the church gets after it in earnest.
It is earier for water to run up hill
!jk than for a selfish man to be happy.
Only by keeping close to Christ can
you give a safe path to the man who
follows you.
Every man who has on the whole
armor of God will be sure to have war
with the devil.
$5 MACIXAC AND RETURN.
C. H. & D. R. R. and D. & O.
* Steamer.
k (FERSOSALLT CONDUCTED TOCB.)
On Thursday, August 26, the C. H. A I).
Ry., in connection with the D. A C. Steam
Nav. Co.. will give their Annual Macinac
Excursion at the low rate of Five Dollars
I for the round trip. These are given to familiarize
the people with the great lakes and
Michigan as a health and pleasure resort
8tate. Ladles and children traveling alone
can participate in this excursion with perF
feet safety, free from worry and enjoy a
genuine pleasure trip. A regular employe
of the C. H. & D. By. will conduct
the party. Special train will leave C..
H. A D. Depot. Cincinnati, 9KX) a.
m.; Hamilton, 9:45 a m.; Dayton,
k* 10:45 a m.; arrive Toledo 8.-05 p. m. Leave
on Steamer Alpena shortly after arrival.
Arrive Detroit and Visit city same evening.
The Alpeaa leaves following morning for
Mackinac. A daylight ride through the St.
Clair Flats to Port Huron, thence out into
the broad waters of Lake Huron. Arrival at
the Island will be at noon, Saturday. Special
rates at Hotels to excursionists. Only $8 00
more to Makqcette than the Mackinac rate.
Side trm to "Soo." S2: to Snow Islands, $1.
Secure your staterooms early. Circulars
and Information on application to agents c.
H. A D. Ry., and agents on connecting lines,
or address D. G. EDWARDS, Pass. Tbaftic
*. Mahaok*. Cijccisxati, 0.
i Farmers Prosperous.
In an interview at Galveston, Tex.,
laat week Hector D. Lane, President of
the American Cotton Growers' Protective
Association, said: "The cotton
crop is in very good condition, and the
indications point to a fair yield. With
favorable weather conditions from now
on we will make a big crop."
"Have you found that the information
and advice you gave the farmers of
u, the South have aone good?"
"It is hard to tell just how much good
1 we have done, but I think in fairness
we have done a reasonable amount. The
farmers in the southeastern States are
in better condition than at any time
since the war. There is a better tone
to business all over the Southeast, and
the farmers are feeling better. They
owe less than at any time within the
last fifteen or twenty years. They were
forced to economize. They had to save,
because the merchants could not afford
to extend credit to them. Frugality
t has led them out of some of their errors,
k Now they are raising more home supP
ply crops. That, of course, is in their
favor, because formerly they bought
nearly everything they needed and paid
long time prices. They were charged
excessive prices because they offered insufficient
security.
Food and Odor.
Vood that has little odor and food
that readily absorbs odors should be
placed at the bottom of the refrigerator.
All foods with a strong odor
should be kept on the top shelves.
Life is like a nutmeg grater?you
have to rub up against the rough side
of it to accomplish anything.
4 sioo Reward. ?lO0.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least.one dreaded disease
that science has been aoie to cure in an iva
stages, and that is atarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity, i atarrh being a constitulional
disease, requires a constitutional treatment.
H all's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly on the blood and mncous surf
faces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the pai
tient strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing Its work. The
proprietors nave so muoh fa th in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
F. J. ChiK*t 4 CO- Toledo. O.
? Sold bv Druggists, 75c.
' Hall's Family PiUs are the best.
I ' S. N. U.?No. 83?'97.
Send your son to the
FISHBURNE MILITARY SCHOOL,
Waynesboro. Va., if you wish him to have
Rood instruction, kind treatment, good influences.
and to be in the best of climates.
Write for Catalogue.
^ fWhen writing please mention this paper.?Ed-]
r * V 1
** 'J I
i A ... ,
ii m until
I
ERRORS IX STORY OF MISSIONARY
BUTLER CORRECTED.
SOME ANCIENT GEORGIA HISTORY.;
Bartow Sage Tell* of the Trouble Expe>- '
rlenced In Getting Indian* to
Leave the State.
That is a pretty and pathetic story
that my young friend Fred Govau
wrote about the missionary, Dr. But- i
ler, and his wife. No doubt but that
it is founded on fact, and he probably !
got his data from ?ome very old man !
who still lives near Coosaville, a little [
village twelve miles below Rome. Ij
was interested in the story, because 1
when I was a lad that same Dr. Butler
was imprisoned in the county jail at
Lawrenceville, where my father lived.
Another missionary, by the name of
Worcester, was imprisoned with him,
and their offense was their refusal to
take the oath of allegiance to the state
of Georgia or otherwise to leave the
Cherokee nation. They were suspected
of using their unflnence to render the
Indians dissatisfied with the treaty
that required them to go west. John
Howard Payne, the author of "Home,
Sweet Home," was also a suspect, and
was arrested and taken to Milledgeville
to be examined. Those were hot
times in Georgia, especially north
Georgia, for Gwinnett was a border
county, and we children could almost
see Indians squatted among the chinquapin
bushes or behind the trees on
the road to the mill. We knew they
were just over the Chattahoochee river,
and that some white people over there
had been murdered by them. Indians
were as much a terror to us as ghosts
and runaway negroes. The new granite
jail had just been completed, and
nine Indians were the first prisoners.
They all escaped within a week. They
took up a stone in the floor and burrowed
out like moles or rabbits.
I never heard until Govan wrote it
that Butler was dragged to Milledgeville
with a rope around his neck, nor
am I prepared to believe that much of
the story. He and Worcester were
arrested at New Echota (in Gordon
county) and brought mounted to Lawrenceville
and tried before Judge
Clayton, who was Mrs. Henry Grady's
grandfather, a learned, humane and
incorruptible judge. They had the
best of local counsel, Elisha Chester,
also a native of Connecticut, and they
had the renowned William Wirt as an
adviser, and they had the president,
John Quiney Adams, on their side.
John Marshal^ the chief justice of the
supreme court, issued his mandamus
to compel Judge Clayton to release the
prisoners, but he refused, and a collision
seemed inevitable between the
United States and the state of Georgia.
I think that Mr. Govan's informant is
mistaken, for Butler had lots of friends
?powerful friends?and John Boss,
the chief of the Cherokees, was backing
him. Doubtless he was a good
man, but he was stubborn and fanatical,
and declared he owed no allegiance
except to the American board
of foreign missions, and to God?that
it was his duty to teach Christianity
to the Indians, and he would continue
to do so.
Both these men were convicted and
sentenced to the penitentiary for four
years. When they arrived at Milledgeville
Governor Lumpkin kindly
advised them to take the oath or agree
to leave the state, and if they would
do either he would at ouce pardon
them. They refused and wrote to the
board of missions for advice. That
board commended their refusal and
again urged Wirt and Sargeant to resort
to the supreme court. But these eminent
lawyers advised an acceptance of
Governor Lumpkin's offer. So they
accepted and were pardoned?and my
father always said they returned to
Connecticut. He knew them and had
many conversations with them, and
gave them good advice, for he, too,
was a New England man. And henca
I am surprised to learn from Mr. Govan
that Butler returned to his missionary
work and died near Coosaville
and was buried by the side of his wife.
In fact, I never knew before that he
had a wife; but, of course, the inscription
on her tombstone settles that.
Mr. Govan gives Butler the Christian
name of Elonez, but the records in the
state archives show his name as he
himself signed it to be Elizur.
It is, however, an interesting and
pathetic story and very great men
figured in it, both state and national.
The conflicts between the state and
the Cherokees and the United States
continued for 12 years and ended only
with the exodus of 1838. Several
treaties were made?made only to be
broken. Ross and Ridge, the two
chiefs, could never agree upon terms,
and they had their followers. When
Georgia ceiled Alabama aud Mississippi
to the United States in 1802, the
consideration was that the United
States should extinguish the Indians'
title and remove them beyond the
Mississippi river. The federal government
was so slow in trying to do
this that after waiting and urging and
entreating for 20 years, the state got
impatient and demanded action. The
Ross party declared they would not go
at all, but finally agreed to cede their
lands for $20,000,000 and 7,000,000
acres of land. This price was considered
beyond reason, and the Ridge
party finally reduced it to $5,000,000 |
and 7,000,000 acres and $600,000 for
expenses in breaking up anil transporting
their very limited household
goods. It is astonishing how many
notable men it took to effect
the removal of the Creeks and
- ?e*. v ? /' '
Cherokees from Georgia. In looking
over the records we find that Governor
James Jackson had trouble with the
Creeks, who. after they had made a
treaty, continued their depredations, |
and he upbraided them and brought
forward a long list of damages, j
amounting to $110,000, which he said
they must pay. "Give me some
paper," said the chief, "and I will
make a longer account against your
people than that." But Governors
Troup and Gilmer and Lumpkin had
the most serious troubles, and their !
complications brought in President i
Adams, and Jackson, John Marshall,
Joseph Story, William Wirt, John
Forsythe, Andrew Pickens, General
Scott and General Gaines?all of whom
took an active part in the negotiations.
This General Gaines was a friend and
military companion of General Andrew
Jackson in the Indian wars, and was
the husband of Myra Clark Gaines,
who had the long and famous lawsuit
against the city of New Orleans.
Fort Gaines, in Georgia, was named
for him, and I suppose that Gainesville
was also.
Then there were many notable Indians
and lialfbreeds, such as John
lloss and Alex McGillivray, William
Mcintosh, Chilly Mcintosh, all ol
Scotch descent. The descendents ol
the Ross family and the Mcintosh
family are domiciled in the Cherokee
nation, and still are leaders
in the tribes. They are all well educated,
and I am not afraid to say that
the Mcintosh girls are the most beautiful
specimens of womanhood I evei
saw, that is to say, except some.
Moore's Lai la Rookh was not to bt
compared to them. They are the onlj
halfbreed children I met in the nation
who did not have an excess of high
cheekbones.
Now, although these Cherokees,
15,000 in number, went west against
their will and 4,000 of them died on
.* ><? wnv rat it was a cood move foi
WM V " ?^ "" ? U
them and they made a good trade?
$5,000,000 and 7,000,000 acres oi
land?the finest lands on the continent,
beautifully wooded and watered,
and what :is worth still more, they liv<
in peace with the outside world. Hert
they were always in conflict not onlj
with the whites, but with themselves,
far they bad two chiefs who did nol
work in harmony, for one was s
Scotchman and the other was not.
Sidney Smith said that Scotchmen
were generally right, but when wrong
were the ^vrongest people in the world
and no argument could turn them.
The word "scotch," "scotch the
wagon," came from their stubborn
ness. But they were true to faith and
to principle. Every signer of th<
Mecklenburg declaration of independence
in 1775 was a Scotchman, or af
they are now generally called, "ScotchIrish,"
that is, Scotchmen who removed
to the north of Ireland. It is ve*~j
strange that so many of them came tc
this wild country and mingled with
the Indians and married their daughT>
1 iV ...
ters. mere were tne x\ogera uruiuwi
on the Chattahoochee who took Indiai
wives. They were good men, good
citizens and well educated. My wife
when a girl used to visit their girls and
was fond of them. You can tell s
Scotchman as far as you see them, foi
they all have auburn or light hair and
blue eyes and florid complexions and
are generally tall and straight. I don't
believe that George Adair is fullblood
on both sides, though he Eas al.'
of their good qualities except their religion.
I am only a half-breed myself,
which is all the better for mj
wife, for as it is she can make me dc
as she pleases and I can make her dc
as she pleases, too, so it's all right and
peace reigns in the household.?Bili
Arp in Atlanta Constitution.
STOPS HIS SPEAKING.
Carolina Senator Cannot Go On With
His Campaign Work On Account of
His Health.
On the 14th Governor Ellerbo, or
South Carolina, received a dispatch
from George M. Crossland, Senator
McLaurin's private secretary, from the
Senator's home in Bennettsville, stating
that Senator McLaurin's illness is
more serious than was first supposed,
and summoning the Governor, who is a
strong j>er6onal friend of the Senator,
to his bedside by the evening train.
Governor Ellerbe was considerably
alarmed, inasmuch a9 Senator McLaurin
had spent the preceding day with him
and appeared to be recovering. _ He
went at f> o'clock this afternoon to Bennettsvillo.
A later telegram makes the same
statement as above as to McLaurin's
illness and goes on to say that his
physician has absolutely forbidden
him frcm attempting to continue his
campaign work for the present
McLaurin's friends hope that his illness
will not have a serious result.
This leaves the campaign work open
to Evans, Irby and Duncan.
PEERING OUR POOR IX CUBA.
? - - - Z7T?_
The Fund Tor mis Furposc .leany
Exhausted.
Consul General Lee in a report to the
State Department at Washington says
the $10?)0t) placed to the credit of the
relief ft.nd on May 22 last, was equivalent
to $10,975 Spanish dollars. This
fund, which he says was expended with
the greatest care and economy, is nearly
exhausted. With it 1,400 destitute
Americans have been fed daily and provided
with necessary medicines. Itcosts
94 cents in United States money for
each person per day or even less, for
transportation is taken from the relief
fund. One hundred and eleven persons
had transportation provided for them to
various parts of the United States.
About 95 per cent, of the 1,400 destitute
persons aie naturalized American citizens,
but who have resided in Cuba for
a long t.me, and whose business is there.
Mauv cf them, the report says, do not
speak Lnglish. A large number have
never been in the United States, being
the wives and. children of naturalized
Americans.
"v t' "
A Beautiful Skin
Is en* of the chief requisites of no attractive ap
pearanco. Itough. dry. scaly patcfcea, little bllalerjr
eruptions, red and unsightly ringworms?
these would si>oll the beauty of a veritable
Venus. They are completely and quickly cured
by Tcttetlne. 50 cents a box at drug etoresor
for 50 cents In stumps from J. T. Shuptrino,
Savannah. Ga.
In Use All Over the World.
Last week we inadvertantly made the advertisement
of Messrs. Sm th& Pomerov, of
Kalamazoo, Mich., builders of all kinds of
steel and wood windmills, for pumping power,
also steel towers, tanks and windmill
specialties, read that they had only stood the
test for five fears when it should have been
twenty-four years, hemeinher these windmills
are in use all over the world and they
won't blow down, warp, twist or buckle.
Mrs. Wlnalow's Soothing Syrup for children
Uun, allays pain, cures wind colic.^5cuk bottle.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervousness
arte;- first day's use of Dr. Kltae's Great
Nerve Restorer. $X trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. K. H. Kljre, Ltd., M31 Arch 8t,Phila.,Pa.
I could not get along without Piso's Cure
for Const.mption. It always cures.?Mrs. K. C.
Moulto>, Needham, Mass., October 21,18sh.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. I. Thomrsons
Eye water. Druggists sell at 25c. a bottle
BUCKINGHAM'S I
DYE
For the Whiskers,
Mustache, and Eyebrows.
In one preparat-on. Easy to
apply at home. Colors brown
r blacL The Gentlemen's
favorite, because satisfactory.
R. P. IIali. a Co., Proprietor.. N'uha*. X. H.
Soid by *11 DruggiiU.
mi ntnrrn nni i rnr vi^ j
LLIIfldtlH UULLCDCi
l for women. i
CHAELOTTE, N. C.
EQUAL TO THE BEST
Colleges for men with every feature of a
high grade College for women added.
A FACULTY OF 15 SPECIALISTS
From schools < t International reposition,
as Yale. Johns Hopkins, Amherst,
University of Vlrginla,Berlin,New England
Conservatory, Paris, Ac.
THREE COURSES
Leading to decrees.
GROUP SYSTEM
With electtves.
MUSIC CONSERVATORY
With coarse leading to diploma. Pipe
Organ,Plano, Violin, Guitar, Banjo,Mandolin.
Vocal.
ART CONSERVATORY
Full coarse to diploma?all varieties.
FULL COMMERCIAL
Course?Teacher from Eastman.
A REFINED HOME
With every modern convenience.
CLIMATE
Similar to that of Ashbvillb.
COLLEGE BUILDING,
ITS ft, frontage.lt3ft.deep, 4-stories high,
built of pressed brick, flre proof, with
araae mn^arn rtrtl {
Catalogue Rent free on application.
Address,
REV. c. B. KING, President,
Charlotte, N. C.
AGENT8 WANTED.?Lire men everywhere
to sell twelve valuable, Indispensable
household articles. Send 26 cents In
stamps for complete sample outfit and full
particulars to c. w. Petkbs, 28 8. Tryon
Street. Charlotte, N. C.
jk War Eapiii JACK FA&U.
_ I have for sale 225 head exn^^R9%Ktra
fine, large, heavy boned,
^ Q^maramoth Jacks, all black
'with white parts, the result
*1 fr ot ye* ?' careful breeding.
15 , il I believe I have the best in
?**?M?*iri#*the world. Stock of breeding
a-e tested and known to be breeders 15 to
161-2 hands high. Correspondence solicited.
I W . L. DeCI.OW', . . Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
iilnTWD D 7CUE
llnHr II11\ vrvmew urn
i ii 111 Lb?\j i 11 w i HTTVBriiiTVTR
t? i dew reocESS sa "^?.nrc,nss
mLU for ?1 per gallon, aj*o Maple anser made from
*ame. "fwant to thank too for mm Maple i;mo
recipe which I find U excellent. ! can recomniand It
highly to any and every one."?Re*. Sam P. Jonea,
Oarternvllle, Oa. Send $1 poatal order and set recipe
or fl and I will add eyelopedla of 30,000 recipe* covering
all department*. Agent* wanted.
J. V LOTNPEICH. - - * Morrlatowa, Tenn.
m fffe B I ? A*DB can be saved withII
I I R| I# out their knowledge by
I I 11 HI Iff Anti-Jag the marvelous
UnU HIV
m Oo,M Broadway, 11. Y.
Tall information (la plain wrapper) mailed free.
BOYS-YOUNG MEN
Read in this papa.' the advartlaement of
DAVIS MILITARY SCHOOL.
cancers^raffito:
^Tlk? flnlWae. OadanaU. OMa
CORRESPONDENCE INVITED.
Old Dominion Iron di Kail Wki, Richmond. V?
n M
Tiij iJURtS WntK? ALL ELSE FAILS. ?
M Dcat Cough Syrup. Tute* Good. Use Q
LtJ In time. Sold by druggists. Ijl
^EcaBEnaras^
MONEY IN CHICKENS
For 25c, in stamps we send a 100 PAGE BOOK
giving the experience of a prnctial Poultry
IJaiser?not an amature, bat a man working
for dollars and cents during 1G years. It
teaches t ow to Detect and Cure Diseases;
Feed for Eggs also for Fattening, which
Fowls to Save for Breeding; everything requisite
for profitable Poultry raising. BOOK
PUBLISHING CO, 13* Leonard Street
New York
atoipBTofiixo
5wni^theCtoW?f6j*^l?<5 x&sw i
arette Book goes wltti*<#^os.pE3Mh. .
A PlMMnt. Cool and Dcligbtfgl ^s*ok*?
Lrow 4 Co. T6>?cco WogM. tuayp. W.^O.^
I Wssi!
FOR
yyOMEN!
I
Woman's modesty and ignorance
of danger often cause her
to endure pains and suffer torture
rather than consult a
physician about _ important
| subjects.
I * Pains in the head, neck,
| back, hips, limbs and lower
| bowels at monthly intervals, in\
dicate alarming derangements.
McELREE'8
j WINE OF CARDUI (
I is a harmless Bitter Wine with- |
| out intoxicating qualities.
Taken at the proper time it ?
| relieves pain, corrects derange- |
| ments, quiets nervousness and |
| cures Whites, Falling of the |
| Womb and Suppressed or too *
n Frequent Menses. Price ?1. ?
| Tm* Sale bj Madletae DmJwv |
SOMETHING NEM,
kamUmMiiiti
Jl/'EEPING abreast with
inwntinns nf this
age, we, by modern machinery,
compress our
powdered Dr. M. A. Simmons'
Liver Medicine into
tablets and sugar coat
them.
Consumers can either
swallow the tablets whole
or chew them up and swallow
with waten The
canay sugar tuauag excludes
the ait, protects the
purified medicine from
microbic influences, prevents
the possibility of
deterioration from atmospheric
changes, insuring
perfect purity and full
strength when taken, and
makes it pleasant to
take as candy. Tablets
contain only the powdered
Liver Medicine, same as
sold in packages by Dr.
M. A. Simmdns and we
his successors, since 1840.
ftto 25 Iwfr jW ffiy*
C. F. Slmmns Medicine Co.,
PROPRIETORS.
St. Loins, M!o.
Mead these prices
in. vide, J<0 fL loo roll, C-25
Hher widths In proportions.
w Win WeriiCo., Uwl?vlll?,Ky.
S. N. U.?No. 83.-'97.
Aucuata. Ga. Actual bating* IfoUxt ffl
books- Hbort tuna Cheap board- Sand (or aataiagaa
HERE
Want to learn all about a Horse?
imperfections and so guard against fra
when same is possible? Tell the ago b;
parts of the animal? How to shoe a
valuable information can be obtained
TRATED HORSE BOOK, which we
only 25 Cents in Stamps.
Book Publis
134 Leonard Street,
w 4
THE THOMAS
Is the most complete system of Blessf
lag, Handling. Cleaning and Packing
Cotton. ImproTM staple, sayae labor*
makfc yon money. Write for Oata?
logneei no other equals It
I HANDLE |
The most Improred Cotton Olns, PreaM^
Eleviitorg, Engines and Boilers to b#
lonnd on tbe marked My Sergeant Log
Beam Saw Mill Is, In simplicity and e?olency,
a wonder. Oorn Mills. Planed.
Gang Edgers and all Wood Workiag
Machinery. Llddell and Talbott En*
glnee are the best Write to me before
buying.
V. C. BADHAM,
(Jeaeral Afui, Colombia, 8. d
THE BJklLEY-LEBBY GO.
EHGELBBRG RICE flULLBR. The only machine
for cleaning rough rloe In ana operation.
HILL SUPPLIES. ES'gfr i
CORN AND CAlIK MfkLS, RUBBER j
AND LEATNKttlKitlNO,
Hose, Packings, Pipe. Fittings and Brip j*(
Goods. Largeet Stcoa of StppHes Soutfi,
Lowest Prices. Prompt Shipments. IUiie-cjBH
trated Catalogue Furnished upon Appllca- Trig
tlon. Try the B-L Co.'s Antl-Frlctiom '
Babbitt Metal, the best for SIGH 8PEXD
machinery.
CHARLESTON', - S. C,
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT hag >
; I adopted the Keelsy Treatment In the Sok
dier's House and in an Inslfttntlon for tab
exclusive use of the Regular Army. _~~m HI
TOBACCO Awo"' I iyevjag daSSite patljS
oey. I he disease yields eaSiy te the Doubll ?
Chloride of Gold Treatment as MmlnktereC 3
at The Keeley Institute, Greenrflla, 8. C.
. Detailed Information mailed og applieatlon ID \?B
THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, %
(OR BOX 37) M
GREENVILLE, ....... f. O. ^
TheOTLVKeelerl?t1is>?t|l. C. ,.Jg
?fty. you ean*t make A dnlif.'l tuytnsft .*18
PIEDMONT. See your dflU# <MjaD fortt. ^m|
Pie icily uiiarantae int #Mom andyoujjin'i
buy a better job on earth at the prioe. Writ*
as If yoar merchant donH handle UNm.
PIEDMONT WA80N CO.,
HICKORY, H. 0>
nAVIDSON COLLEGE, m
u DAVIDSON, - - N. C.
61XTT-PIR8T TM*. . . SEPTERBEX 9, 1397,
Courses for A. B.. B. 8., and A, M. Degrees.
Y. M. C. A. Hall and Gymnasium.
Ten Professors and Instructors.
Four Laboratories
SEND FOR A CATALOGUE. JS
?" ?.? T.iwoinv -'i-aW
l/UASBll/Ab, IMIUJUIIU, ?l-l-S
MATHEMATICAL DIBLtlCAL,
SCIENTIFIC, COMMERCIAL {fig
ADDBI8STME PBISIIMNT, 'M
REV. J. B. SHEARER, D. D.. IL D, <|
?
WIR6IWA BUSIMESS B0L^T~
V < > <?> RICHMOND, VA.
306-inatitoalatw iMt mmIoo.?80IS &
lQmOMm EeprweetwL?10
Guioina Amaro TO FOMTKMM. %
V KUgaat CatatogM Tra*
B. A. DAVll, Jr., - - Presides*.
THE BUSS SCHML OF ELECTIIWTT 1
gs^issay-^isr&arss. j
pared try u* mr failed to p&a* nfahl
wmam ^ ^ *? t en dAnn*pou*jia?
cMmeUXow rates. Writ* for Ctfaloaw '
STMTEin C0UIM2??^Ji5s? J
Bookkeeping. Seat. Cheapest. flQwBga ftHnaSaZ
ROBERT E. LEE.
Tke toklier, dileen and tshri^n hero. A free! netr
book Just ready, jdtrtng life wdiatMlR. AMM
FPMJ8H1NQ PP.. XI lad^.tMn Hte.. Blrfraond.Ta. '
POMDI CTC coTTon, saw, grist. Si
lUmrLL I ? oil and Fertiliser
MILL OUTFITS.
A1k> 61b, Preu, Cm* Mill ud ' .*]
Shingle Outfit*.
<5T Cast evry day; tcork 180 hands. ijB
LOMBARD IRON WORKS .
AND SUPPLY COMPANY. ,3
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. :
M feM a perfect Coal
jwjjffill -3 011 Lantern. 'ffij
BHDi Buos'i'Srilliaat' 1
H iirricsne^^^^S
it for you. ,i?
Oth?r^ lanterns
Tflsi
How to piok oat a good one? Know *
nd? Detect disease and effect a care *1
y the teeth? What to call the different
Horse properly? All this and other -t
I by reading' our 100-PAGE ILLUSwill
forward,, postpaid, on receipt ot A hing
House, |
_ - New York City. |
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